On Saturday 26 May 2007 10:31 pm, Matt Kettler wrote: > Chris wrote: > > Old-X-Spam-Status: Yes, score=12.351 tagged_above=-10 required=10 > > tests=[ADVANCE_FEE_1=0, ADVANCE_FEE_2=1.392, ADVANCE_FEE_3=3.336, > > ADVANCE_FEE_4=3.727, ALL_TRUSTED=-1.8, BAYES_60=1, > > DNS_FROM_RFC_ABUSE=0.2, DNS_FROM_RFC_POST=1.708, > > DNS_FROM_RFC_WHOIS=1.447, RAZOR2_CHECK=0.5, UNDISC_RECIPS=0.841] > > > > Yes, they tagged it correctly as spam, however, I can't see how > > ALL_TRUSTED fired. > > Unless the email orignated within the ISP, they have a broken Trust > Path. 5 bucks says they have their mailserver behind a static-mapped > NAT, which confuses the trust-path auto-guesser, requiring a manual > configuration. > > ALL_TRUSTED should *NEVER* mail that is not from your network or > manually configured trusted sites. > > You could direct them to: > > http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/TrustPath > > However, getting an ISP to listen to anything reported by an end user is > damn near impossible.
I've tried sending messages to Synacor support but have not even received an acknowledgement to my messages so I'm inclined to think they're being /dev/null'd. I did a whois lookup this evening and sent an email to this person: RTechHandle: AGH4-ARIN RTechName: Howell, Adam Greg RTechPhone: +1-716-853-1362 RTechEmail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] with some examples. I'm now just waiting for it to bounce. -- Chris KeyID 0xE372A7DA98E6705C
pgpzRYPsFimMa.pgp
Description: PGP signature